36 Thirty-second Report on the State Museum. 



The five species now known to occur in our State may be tabulated as 

 follows : 



Stem hollow or pervious to the base : 



Hymenium and stem yellow, spores .0004 / -.0005 / long-.. . C. lutescens Pers. 

 Hymenium and stem subcinereous or brown. 



Pileus tubiform, spores .0005 / -.0007 / long C. cornucopioides L. 



Pileus expanded or funnelform, spores .00025 / -.0003 / 



long C. dubius Pk. 



Stem solid : 



Hymenium and stem similarly colored, spores .0003' long, C. Cantharellus Schw. 

 Hymenium darker than the stem, spores .0004/-.0005' 

 long C. clavatus Pers. 



CORTICIUM POLYPOROIDEUM B. & C. 



Decaying wood. Buffalo. Clinton. 



CORTICIUM SUBREPANDUM B. & Cke. 



Dead branches. Center. Sept. 



Thelephora radiata Holmsk. 



Ground under pine trees. Center and Providence. Aug. and Sept. 



Clavaria fastigiata L. 



Among mosses and under pine trees. Adirondack Mountains and Ganse- 

 voort. Aug. 



Clavaria Formosa Pers. 



Ground in woods. Sandlake and Gansevoort. Aug. 



Clavaria corrugata Karst. 



Ground in pine woods. West Albany. Sept. 



Clavaria flaccida Ft. 



Ground in woods, also under spruce trees. Sandlake, Center and Adiron- 

 dack Mountains. Common. 



A form sometimes occurs with the tips of the branchlets white. 



Pterula divaricata n. sp. 



Tufts lax, whitish or rufescent, about one inch high ; stems slender, irregu- 

 larly branched ; branches widely diverging,, slender and gradually tapering to 

 a long slender subulate point. 



Among fallen leaves and on half-buried decaying wood. South Corinth, 

 Saratoga County. Aug. 



The lax habit and slender widely diverging branches distinguish this species 

 from its allies. 



Tremella subcarnosa n. sp. 



Small, tufted, compressed, irregular, wavy or contorted, subcarnose, whitish 

 or pinkish-alutaceous, brownish-incarnate and more or less glaucous when dry ; 

 spores obovate, pointed at the base, .0002'-.0003' long, .00016 broad. 

 Tufts 2"-4" high and broad. 



